Simple question, hard answer?

Sombra

A
Sombra

  • 3
  • 0
  • 52
The Gap

H
The Gap

  • 5
  • 2
  • 78
Ithaki Steps

H
Ithaki Steps

  • 2
  • 0
  • 92

Forum statistics

Threads
199,008
Messages
2,784,545
Members
99,767
Latest member
wwestergard
Recent bookmarks
0

nsouto

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2005
Messages
627
Location
Sydney Australia
Format
Multi Format
Polaroid: how come they can develop AND fix with a single exposure to a single chemical bath and with traditional film we can't?
What's the secret?

TIA for any insights.
 

Alex Bishop-Thorpe

Advertiser
Joined
Jul 6, 2006
Messages
1,451
Location
Adelaide, South Australia
Format
Multi Format
In a word, monobath - a very well designed and effective monobath. From what I understand, the problem with monobaths and conventional film is that the chemistry has to be carefully fine tuned for each emulsion. I was reccomended the Monobath Manual, by Grant Haist, if you're interested in the topic.
 

nickandre

Member
Joined
Oct 22, 2007
Messages
1,918
Location
Seattle WA
Format
Medium Format
I don't believe the instant film "fixes" the image. I think it develops the negative image and the remaining dyes/silver move to the positive sheet. Peeling or a timing layer stops the process. Fuji has a PDF with their instant packfilms.
 

Alex Bishop-Thorpe

Advertiser
Joined
Jul 6, 2006
Messages
1,451
Location
Adelaide, South Australia
Format
Multi Format
Peeling doesn't stop the process, you can try it for yourself. The development time labelled on the film is the minimum time. Take two photos of the same scene, peel one at the suggested time, and the other at 15 minutes, and there wont be a noticeable difference between them.
 

Anscojohn

Subscriber
Joined
Dec 31, 2006
Messages
2,704
Format
Medium Format
Polaroid: how come they can develop AND fix with a single exposure to a single chemical bath and with traditional film we can't?
What's the secret?

TIA for any insights.
********
We can. Unibath developer/fixers have been around for a long time.
 

Vaughn

Subscriber
Joined
Dec 13, 2006
Messages
10,102
Location
Humboldt Co.
Format
Large Format
I don't believe the instant film "fixes" the image. I think it develops the negative image and the remaining dyes/silver move to the positive sheet. Peeling or a timing layer stops the process. Fuji has a PDF with their instant packfilms.

Would not explain Type 55. Both positive and neg are fixed.
 

cmacd123

Subscriber
Joined
May 24, 2007
Messages
4,314
Location
Stittsville, Ontario
Format
35mm
The peel appart Poloroids are a process called "difusion Transfer Reversal" all the silver ends up in the negative or the print so their is little for a fixer to do. In the most common case the print only gets the image silver. The Type 55 did need an extra step to stabilize the neg. Most of the films also had a coater to stabilize the print.
 
OP
OP
nsouto

nsouto

Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2005
Messages
627
Location
Sydney Australia
Format
Multi Format
I do recall at some stage Polaroid had an "instant" slide film, with its own processor box. Mid 80s? A very simplified process, IIRC.

I'm just curious towards all this. After all: doing my own development of b&w, I'm only too familiar with the issues of timing, developer concentration, agitation, fixing, washing, and what not.

Yet the folks at Polaroid managed to get around all those problems in one single step. Amazing!

And the quality was quite acceptable, IIRC. At least in B&W, if not colour as well. May be not in slides, I don't think the instant version was that popular?

Still: an amazing state of affairs and one that baffles me to this day. How come no one seems to experiment with these Unibath processes and refine them? Or am I looking in the wrong places?


Like I said, not a major subject: just decided to "shoot the breeze" on this one. Thanks for all the interesting information.
 

Steve Smith

Member
Joined
May 3, 2006
Messages
9,109
Location
Ryde, Isle o
Format
Medium Format
Yet the folks at Polaroid managed to get around all those problems in one single step. Amazing!

I have the Edwin Land biography 'Insisting on the Impossible'. In that book, there is an explanation of how the black and white diffusion process works which I can just about understand. Then it goes on about colour and I am lost!


Steve.
 

bdial

Subscriber
Joined
Jan 2, 2005
Messages
7,470
Location
North East U.S.
Format
Multi Format
That book is a great read, and has good, simplified explainations of how the Polaroid processes work.
 

bsdunek

Member
Joined
Jul 27, 2006
Messages
1,611
Location
Michigan
Format
Multi Format
Just shows that there are some really smart people in this world. I barely scraped through chemistry in college, so they have my respect!
 

keithwms

Member
Joined
Oct 14, 2006
Messages
6,220
Location
Charlottesvi
Format
Multi Format
That is a nice book, a bit long in parts, but it contains some good insight into Land's experimentalism and just how hard he worked (and with a tremendous amount of faith that it was all worth something). The most enjoyable tidbit for me was to see how he was motivated by one child's simple question of where does the image go and why can't we see it right away.

Form the book, it's not clear that we know yet just how much Land worked on satellite recon, and how close the relationship was between Polaroid and the military or whether it was just an ongoing individual consulting gig with little money attached. I would guess that he would have been absolutely worshipped by the recon community.... the technology he had would have made almost real-time high res imaging possible, a very big deal during the Cold War. Maybe others were convinced that they didn't need his partnership- Kodak certainly had some heavy hitters too.

That is an interesting piece of history that is, as far as I know, still untold. Also lacking in the book was the kind of detail needed to understand the patent wars with Kodak, but that would of course have made the book far more technical.

Overall, an excellent read and a nice Christmas gift!
 
Last edited by a moderator:

BobCrowley

Member
Joined
Jan 31, 2010
Messages
119
Location
Massachusett
Format
4x5 Format
Haist's book has a number of monobaths that are similar to the reagent used in Old Pol's Type 55. Meanwhile, starting with Donald Quall's excellent HC-110 based recipe, we pH tuned a reagent that we use successfully on Efke 25, TMX, and Pan-F. The Efke monobath/reagent works in 2 minutes and the others in about 6 minutes.

Diffusion Transfer Reversal or DTR is indeed a powerful agent in the development of instant pack and sheet films, and acts like a powerful intensifier, so it needs a negative with little silver. Whatever Old Pol picked for 55, some insist it was Panatomic-X, it was a thin emulsion not too different from the Efke 25. If you look at an MSDS from T55 you will recognize it as similar to one of the monobaths in Haist, but with the addition of methyl cellulose to thicken it, and a little extra sodium sulfite to at least stabilize the negative.

There is a lot on the subject at http://new55project.blogspot.com especially posts 1-40 where a lot of the research into the reagents was discussed. Later on the blog are a number of examples of negatives processed in monobaths or reagents we've tried, the latest being reagent III, which works with Efke 25 fairly nicely.
 

Gerald C Koch

Member
Joined
Jul 12, 2010
Messages
8,131
Location
Southern USA
Format
Multi Format
The newer Polaroid color prints were completely enclosed in plastic and depended on the migration of dyes formed during development to the front of the print. Fixing was not necessary in this case.

I too would recommend Grant Haist, The Monobath Manual. Besides discussing monbaths and giving a practical monobath formula there is a lot of good photochemistry in this book.
 
Photrio.com contains affiliate links to products. We may receive a commission for purchases made through these links.
To read our full affiliate disclosure statement please click Here.

PHOTRIO PARTNERS EQUALLY FUNDING OUR COMMUNITY:



Ilford ADOX Freestyle Photographic Stearman Press Weldon Color Lab Blue Moon Camera & Machine
Top Bottom